Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-gxg78 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-24T19:45:44.408Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The fossiliferous Silurian rocks of the Dunquin inlier, Dingle Peninsula, County Kerry, Ireland

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 November 2011

C. H. Holland
Affiliation:
Department of Geology, Trinity College, Dublin 2, Ireland.

Abstract

The history of investigation of the Silurian rocks of the Dunquin inlier, Dingle Peninsula, County Kerry, Ireland is briefly reviewed. The Dunquin Group of upper Wenlock (Homerian) to middle Ludlow (Ludfordian) sedimentary and volcanic rocks is divided into five formations: the Ferriters Cove, Clogher Head, Mill Cove, Drom Point and Croaghmarhin Formations, the last of which reaches the Ludlow and passes transitionally into the succeeding continental Dingle Group, probably largely Přídolí in age. The Dunquin group is of varied shallow marine sediments with a continental episode probably represented in the Mill Cove Formation. The biostratigraphy of the other four formations is considered in relation to a full faunal list. Details of representative sections and exposures are provided. There is brief comment on the palaeogeographical setting of the inlier.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1988

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Archer, J. B. 1980. Patrick Ganly: Geologist. IR NAT J 20, 142–14.Google Scholar
Bassett, M. K. 1972. The articulate brachiopods from the Wenlock Series of the Welsh Borderland and South Wales. Part 2. PALAEONTOGR SOC MONOGR, 2778.Google Scholar
Bassett, M. K., Cocks, L. R. M., Holland, C. H., Rickards, R. B. & Warren, P. T. 1975. The type Wenlock Series. REP INST GEOL SCI 75/13.Google Scholar
Bassett, M. G., Cocks, L. R. M. & Holland, C. H. 1976. The affinities of two endemic Silurian brachiopods from the Dingle Peninsula, Ireland. PALAEONTOLOGY 19, 615625.Google Scholar
Clark, J. W. & Hughes, T. McK. 1890. The Life and Letters of The Reverend Adam Sedgwick, 2 Vols. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Davidson, T. 18671871. A monograph of the British fossil Brachiopoda, Vol. 3, part VII, the Silurian Brachiopoda. PALAEONTOGR SOC MONOGR, 1397.Google Scholar
Doran, R. J. P., Holland, C. H. & Jackson, A. A. 1973. The sub-Old Red Sandstone surface in southern Ireland. PROC R IR ACAD 73B, 109128.Google Scholar
Earp, J. R. 1944. Observations on Upper Silurian graptolites. GEOL MAG 81, 181185.Google Scholar
Gardiner, C. I. & Reynolds, S. H. 1902. The fossiliferous Silurian beds and associated igneous rocks of the Clogher Head district (Co. Kerry). Q J GEOL SOC LONDON 58, 226266.Google Scholar
Griffith, R. & M‘Coy, F. 1846. A synopsis of the Silurian fossils of Ireland. Dublin.Google Scholar
Herries, Davies G. L. 1983. Sheets of Many Colours. Dublin: Royal Dublin Society.Google Scholar
Herries, Davies G. L. & Mollan, R. C. (eds). 1980. Richard Griffith 1784–1878. Dublin: Royal Dublin Society.Google Scholar
Holland, C. H. 1959. The Ludlovian and Downtonian rocks of the Knighton district, Radnorshire. Q J GEOL SOC LONDON 114, 449482.Google Scholar
Holland, C. H. 1962. The Ludlovian—Downtonian succession in Central Wales and the Central Welsh Borderland. Symposiums-band der 2. internationalen Arbeitstagung uber die Silur/Devon—Grenze und die Stratigraphie vion Silur und Devon, Stuttgart, 8794. Stuttgart: E. Schweizerbart'sche.Google Scholar
Holland, C. H. 1969a. Irish counterpart of Silurian of Newfoundland. In Kay, M. (ed.) North Atlantic—Geology and Continental Drift, 289308. MEM AM ASSOC PET GEOL.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Holland, C. H. 1969b. The Welsh Silurian geosyncline in its regional context. In Wood, A. (ed.) The Pre-Cambrian and Lower Palaeozoic Rocks of Wales, 203217. Cardiff: University of Wales Press.Google Scholar
Holland, C. H. (ed.) 1981. A Geology of Ireland. Edinburgh: Scottish Academic Press.Google Scholar
Holland, C. H. 1987. Stratigraphical and structural relationships of the Dingle Group (Silurian), County Kerry, Ireland. GEOL MAG 124, 3342.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Holland, C. H., Lawson, J. D. & Walmsley, V. G. 1963. The Silurian rocks of the Ludlow district, Shropshire. BULL BR MUS (NAT HIST) GEOL 8, 93171.Google Scholar
Horne, R. R. 1974. The lithostratigraphy of the Late Silurian to Early Carboniferous of the Dingle Peninsula, Co. Kerry. BULL GEOL SURV IREL 1, 395428.Google Scholar
Horne, R. R. 1976. Geological Guide to the Dingle Peninsula. GUIDE SER, GEOL SURV IREL 1.Google Scholar
Jukes, J. B. & Du Noyer, G. V. 1863. Explanation of sheets 160, 161, 171, and part of 172, and of the engraved section, sheet no. 15, of the Geological Survey of Ireland, illustrating part of the County Kerry. MEM GEOL SURV IRE.Google Scholar
Kokelaar, P. 1988. Tectonics controls of Ordovician arc and marginal basin volcanism in Wales. J GEOL SOC 145 (in press).Google Scholar
Parkin, J. 1974. Silurian rocks of Inishvickillane, Blasket Islands, Co. Kerry. SCI PROC R DUBLIN SOC A5, 277291.Google Scholar
Parkin, J. 1976a. Silurian rocks of the Bull's Head, Annascaul and Derrymore Glen inliers, Co. Kerry. PROC R IR ACAD 76B, 577606.Google Scholar
Parkin, J. 1976b. The geology of the Foze Rocks, Co. Kerry: a review. IR NAT J 18, 308309.Google Scholar
Simpson, S. 1957. On the trace-fossil Chondrites. Q J GEOL SOC LONDON 112, 475499.Google Scholar
Walmsley, V. G. 1959. The geology of the Usk inlier (Monmouthshire). Q J GEOL SOC LONDON 114, 483521.Google Scholar
Watkins, R. 1978. Silurian marine communities west of Dingle, Ireland. PALAEOGEOGR, PALAEOCLIMATOL, PALAEOECOL 23, 79118.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wood, E. M. R. 1900. The Lower Ludlow formation and its graptolite—fauna. Q J GEOL SOC LONDON 56, 415492.Google Scholar
Ziegler, A. M. 1970. Geosynclinal development of the British Isles during the Silurian Period. J GEOL 78, 445479.Google Scholar